Mina, Saudi Arabia
Mina, nicknamed the "City of the Tents," is a valley located southeast of the city of Mecca, in the district of Masha'er, Province of Makkah in the Hejazi region of Saudi Arabia. Covering an area of approximately, Mina incorporates the tents, the area of Jamarat, and the slaughterhouses just outside the tents.
Mina is most famous for its role in the Hajj. To accommodate the pilgrims who stay in Mina over multiple nights in the month of Dhu al-Hijjah, more than 100,000 air-conditioned tents have been built in the area, giving Mina the nickname "City of Tents." With a capacity of up to 3 million people, Mina has been called the largest tent city in the world. The three Jamarat, located in the Mina valley, are the location of the Jamarat, performed between sunrise and sunset in the final days of the Hajj. The stone throwing ritual commemorates the Islamic prophet Ibrahim 's stoning of the Devil, who wanted to prevent him from carrying out the command of Allah to sacrifice his son, Isma'il.
History
In Islamic tradition, Ibrahim left his wife, Hajar and their infant son, Isma'il, in the valley of Mecca. Upon one of his visits to his family in Mecca, he was ordered by God in a dream to sacrifice his son in the Mina valley. While carrying out his son's sacrifice, he was interrupted by the Shaitan, and commanded by Allah to stone the Devil. The ritual of Jamarat is a commemoration of this belief. Mina is also believed to be the location of the pledges in Al-Aqabah of the Ansar to the Islamic prophet Muhammad.Before the tents were built, pilgrims would bring their own tents to the valley and dismantle them while returning from the Hajj. Sometime in the 1990s, permanent cotton tents were installed by the Saudi government. These cotton tents were especially susceptible to fires, which took many pilgrims' lives. After the 1997 Mina fires which resulted in the deaths of more than 340 pilgrims, more than 100,000 permanent tents, measuring, were built. These are constructed of fiberglass with an outer coating of Teflon to protect them from fires. The tents are grouped into camps, each with their own exterior walls, and divided by the nationalities of pilgrims, providing temporary accommodation to up to 3 million pilgrims. Each camp is equipped with a kitchen, bathrooms, and ablution facilities, and is connected to the other camps by pathways. The tents are also marked with unique color-and-number pairs to make them more identifiable.
Incidents during the Hajj
Owing to its location and the extreme numbers of pilgrims during the Hajj, Mina and the surrounding region, especially the Jamarat Bridge, are hotspots for stampedes, the deadliest of which was the 2015 stampede, resulting in the deaths of more than 2,000 pilgrims:| Date | Name of the incident | Location | Deaths | Non-fatal injuries | Sources |
| 3 July 1990 | 1990 Mecca tunnel stampede | al-Mu'aisim Tunnel, Mecca | 1,426 | Unknown | |
| 23 May 1994 | 1994 Hajj stampede | Jamarat Bridge | 270+ | 200+ | |
| 15 April 1997 | 1997 Mina fires | Mina | 340+ | 1,500+ | |
| 9 April 1998 | 1998 Hajj stampede | Jamarat Bridge | 118+ | 180+ | |
| 5 March 2001 | 2001 Hajj stampede | Jamarat Bridge | 35+ | Unknown | |
| 1 February 2004 | 2004 Hajj stampede | Jamarat Bridge | 251+ | 244+ | |
| 12 January 2006 | 2006 Hajj stampede | Jamarat Bridge | 363 | 1,000+ | |
| 24 September 2015 | 2015 Mina stampede | Street 204/223, Mina | 769+ | 936+ |